First Lego League

On January 30, 2011, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

The First Lego League BC Provincial Championships were a nice opening live event production for the BCIT Television & Video Production students this year!

We had a great group of volunteers who donated their time on Friday and Saturday to produce the event.  Our students were doing everything from running the cables to switching, directing, running the cameras and streaming the signal online.  Check out the photo gallery for some behind the scenes production action!

We had a few technical issues with our internet feed that resulted in the quality being lower than we had hoped for, however a fix is in the works and we’re already looking forward to our next live event.  Stay tuned!

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Egyptian Orphanage Documentary – Fundraiser

On January 21, 2011, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

Second-year Television & Video Production students Mariam Demian and Andrea Gilbert are producing a documentary in Cairo, Egypt on orphans and the Egyptian adoption system this February/March.

Thousands of children live in orphanages without ever leaving and even sometimes stay and work there because they have not received a good enough education to move ahead in life and adoption is not legal- therefore, there’s never even a chance of them having a real family. Your help will allow the organization to provide a clean, safe and nurturing environment for the kids, because for now, there is no other option.

Your support for this project would be so very appreciated! Partial proceeds will be donated to the Littlest Lamb Orphanage as they’ve so far been supportive in giving us interviews when we get there. Additional proceeds will go towards our project shedding light on this very important issue.

It’s a big project and it’s ambitious, but we’re working hard to make the most of this documentary because it’s a topic that needs attention!

Tickets are $10. Tickets will be available through Mariam and Andrea, as well as at the door between 7:30pm and 11pm.

Location:

Lamplighter Pub
210 Abbott St (Gastown)
Vancouver, BC
February 1, 2011
Time: 7:30pm
Tickets: $10
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First Lego League @ BCIT

On January 15, 2011, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

BCIT Television & Video Production students will be producing a live webcast of this year’s First Lego League BC Provincial Championships, held at the BCIT Burnaby Campus on Saturday, January 15, 2011.

The FIRST LEGO League is a robotics program for 9 to 14 year olds, which is designed to get children excited about science and technology — and teach them valuable employment and life skills.

Tune in to our live stream URL to watch the action beginning at 9am PST!

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Out and about with cameras!

On October 7, 2010, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

This week has been the first time we’ve taken our new first-year students out to work with their equipment around the BCIT Campus in a “production capacity”.

Students have been out practising the camera, audio, and composition skills they’ve learned over the last few weeks to produce short segments about some of the trades and technical students at BCIT.  We’re looking for proper technical control of the camera (focus, aperture, white balance, audio levels), proper use of microphones (which mic to use, where to place it for optimum pickup), and how to compose shots to make it interesting for viewers.

After shooting, we head back to the broadcast centre to spend the afternoon in the edit suite with Final Cut Pro, putting all of the footage together so we can do some critiquing in class and learn about what worked and what didn’t.

A fairly busy day, but great hands-on experience!

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Almost time…

On September 1, 2010, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

So it’s almost time to get going with the fall 2010 semester at BCIT.

Here’s a few quick references for new and returning Television & Video Production students:

Orientation

  • Orientation Day for new First-Year students is Tuesday, September 7th.  Check out the orientation page for more information.
  • Second-year students have been contacted by their instructors with information for the first week back.

Timetables

These timetables may change slightly as they are not finalized yet.

my.bcit

  • All television instructors will be sending email to your my.bcit.ca email address – please login and set it to forward your email (under options/settings) if you want to use Gmail, Hotmail, or any other email provider.
  • Make sure you enable forwarding, and select “Do not leave copy on server” so your mailbox doesn’t fill up (we send a lot of email)!

That’s about it for now, if you have any other questions, drop us an email (or just post a reply here).

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Coming to you Live and Direct…

On August 29, 2010, in Television & Video Production, by Television Faculty

The Max Headroom TV series premiered back in 1987 and was one of the first “Cyberpunk” television shows.  The story lines having to do with huge international television / broadcast networks controlling culture and politics were at least 10 or 15 years ahead of their time.

Nobody would argue that mainstream media has a vast influence on these things today!

One of the fascinating things about the fictional “Network 23”, was the idea that all of the camera operators would have continual real time feeds from their portable cameras back to the network. Directors could see the output of any camera at any time, and see their exact location on a map – all in real time.

This type of portable technology was unheard of back in the late 80s, when large satellite uplinks and microwave vans were required to get video back to the station from remote locations.

Fast-forward to 2010, and an update to Sony’s “Location Porter” system looks to be enabling exactly that kind of connectivity, now on a large-scale basis.

Broadcasters have had the capability to use small mobile transmitters and VOIP systems to deliver video for a few years now, but this system takes it up a notch with a turnkey system that enables real time video/audio streaming for up to 12 sources (cameras, remotes, etc) at the same time at the push of a button.

Because it uses high-speed mobile data networks for connectivity, it’s relatively cheap compared with conventional systems.  It’s no longer a matter of shooting a story and delivering media back at a later time, but realtime capture right onto a live show, or into an editorial system.

Maybe the future of broadcast news isn’t getting a single camera to an event and trying to cover everything at one, but to get a “swarm” of networked realtime cameras that feed everything and anything back simultaneously.

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